7 animals that went extinct in 2019.

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Extinction will happen to us eventually.
So, shouldn't we be doing everything within our capabilities to prevent it or at least slow it down ? So far, we've done just the opposite.

Gee, what made YOU think I don't care about endangered animal and plant life?

Go look up the Franklin Tree Franklinia alatamaha
Only noticing your casual attitude about it, but I'm just saying
apathy can be just as harmful as negligence.

How many plants and animals have YOU saved?

99% of all animals and plants have died out BEFORE humans appeared on the planet, go ahead, flail around with your false concerns, leave me out of it. I haven't supported or promoted habitation destruction in my life, don't try making it appear that I don't care what is going on, but making false or misleading claims about extinction possibilities are common, thus I have to be wary on what the media and people says on this subject.
 
Neanderthal, Denisovians are gone, the planet shrugs and goes on as it is.

We are the LAST of the hominids, we are dying out, once there were several types of hominids on earth at the same time, but now just us, we are all that is left.

Extinction will happen to us eventually.
We killed off the other hominids, dumbass. It's one thing when species go extinct over the course of millions of years due to the slow forces of evolution. It's entirely another when the human race wipes out hundreds of them every year through our shear callousness and the burden of our numbers on an ecosystem.

You sure about that?

Smithsonian Insider

Why did Neanderthals go extinct?

In Anthropology, Q & A, Science & Nature / 11 August 2015

by John Gribbin

LINK

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The Guardian

Why did the Neanderthals die out?

Robin McKie science editor
Sun 2 Jun 2013 02.30 EDT

LINK

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It seems that according to these two links, that Neanderthals was a COLD climate being, who had little social skills development. This makes them highly sensitive to a warming climate, with a lack of community skills to help each other survive the changes that surrounded them. The only know contact between the two groups was in the SOUTHERN zone of Europe, where there is NO known evidence of combat, but evidence of interbreeding.

Most white people in fact all I think actually have traces of neanderthal genetic material in their genes. Did they go extinct or simply fade away though evolution along with other hominids?
 
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